Published on in Vol 5, No 1 (2018): Jan-Mar

How Can Social Media Lead to Co-Production (Co-Delivery) of New Services for the Elderly Population? A Qualitative Study

How Can Social Media Lead to Co-Production (Co-Delivery) of New Services for the Elderly Population? A Qualitative Study

How Can Social Media Lead to Co-Production (Co-Delivery) of New Services for the Elderly Population? A Qualitative Study

Journals

  1. Rolls K, Hansen M, Jackson D, Elliott D. Why Health Care Professionals Belong to an Intensive Care Virtual Community: Qualitative Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2019;21(11):e14068 View
  2. Kamalpour M, Watson J, Buys L. How Can Online Communities Support Resilience Factors among Older Adults. International Journal of Human–Computer Interaction 2020;36(14):1342 View
  3. Kamalpour M, Rezaei Aghdam A, Watson J, Tariq A, Buys L, Eden R, Rehan S. Online health communities, contributions to caregivers and resilience of older adults. Health & Social Care in the Community 2021;29(2):328 View
  4. Cho W, Melisa W. Citizen Coproduction and Social Media Communication: Delivering a Municipal Government’s Urban Services through Digital Participation. Administrative Sciences 2021;11(2):59 View
  5. Altinok K, Erdsiek F, Yilmaz-Aslan Y, Brzoska P. Expectations, concerns and experiences of rehabilitation patients during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany: a qualitative analysis of online forum posts. BMC Health Services Research 2021;21(1) View
  6. Daneshvar H, Carver H, Strachan G, Greenhalgh J, Matheson C. From Digital Inclusion to Digital Transformation in the Prevention of Drug-Related Deaths in Scotland: Qualitative Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2024;26:e52345 View

Books/Policy Documents

  1. Li J, Qu N, Penaranda Valdivia K. Social Robotics. View